Cathy’s head banged up and down on the hard surface of the
floor of the vehicle. Where was she? Where was Al? Please
don’t let him die, she pled to any deity out there
listening.
The rhythm pounded through her head. Jiggidy-jog,
jiggidy-jog. She soon recognized the movement from her
younger days of riding lessons. A horse was pulling the cart
over bumpy terrain. As they passed through an opening in the
trees, the moonlight shone down on the scene. Cathy
surreptitiously looked around her. She was in a rough cart
with three high sides mostly filled with chopped wood. She
looked to the front of the cart, where the rump of a small
horse, a little larger than a pony, bounced up and down
between the shafts. An old man held the reins attached to
the horse’s bridle as he walked beside the animal leading it
along the deeply rutted lane. Several small bells jingled on
the harness, as though to warn anyone on the narrow road of
the approaching group of villagers.
She turned her head to the side. Her nostrils filled
with the smell of sacking, just like the ones filled with
potatoes at the vegetable shop. The material scraped her
skin as her face grazed it with each shift of her body.
Blood still caked her forehead, and the cuts on her
hands and knees stung.
She raised herself onto an elbow and reached upward
with her other hand to the top of the board on the side of
the cart and poked her head above the rim.
Several men of various ages shuffled alongside the huge
solid-wood wheels. They had long, bedraggled hair, and wore
blanket-like cloaks. Ponchos? Who were these people and
where was she? Bewildered, she dropped back down onto the
bottom of the cart.
She’d been picked up from the roadside by a bunch of
hippies! They must be camped out in the forest somewhere
away from prying eyes. Now no one would ever find her. She
lay back down on the floor of the cart and tried to control
her breathing, which came in panicked gasps. She feared they
would hold her for a ransom, or something worse.
The old man leading the horse rang a bell as he walked.
Another played an odd melody on a pan flute. The music
drifted through the misty air of the forest. The men called
back and forth to each other, and she strained her ears to
catch what they said.
“Wifmann,” mumbled one man, “wohful.”
The words were strange and guttural—almost Germanic.
Although dumbfounded, Cathy understood what they were
saying. Could she be wrong? Could this band of hippie
misfits really be speaking Old English? She’d heard the
ancient words for “woman wicked.”
“Na wifmann wohful,” the old man yelled back. “She’s not a
wicked woman.”
Her vocabulary words from the class she’d just taken
were fresh in her mind. She wasn’t mistaken. They were
conversing in Old English.
The old man raised his fist as a signal to the others
to come to a halt. He let go of the horse’s reins, walked
back and peered at the woman sprawled on the blanket. He
held out his hand to help her as she struggled to sit up. He
called out to the others, “Séo forht cwen aweccan—the
frightened woman is awake.”
She dangled her legs over the front of the cart and
immediately felt dizzy. The old man said, “Bealo. Injury,”
as he touched the gash on her head. His hand lingered in her
hair, stroking the curls.
“Don’t touch me.” Cathy pushed his hand away. “Who are
you?”
She spun her head around to face the others. “Are you
Anglo-Saxon re-enactors from the village?”
No reaction from the men. Either they were ignoring
her, or didn’t understand plain English.
“Hael wastu? How are you?” the old man said.
“I am injured,” she answered in their language. Hell, I
might as well play their game too, she told herself. They
aren’t the only ones who know the old language. “My husband
and I were in an accident. Two men were calling for medical
help, and that is the last thing I remember.”
“Woman, I know not what you are saying.” A frown
crossed his forehead.
“Then you must have found me and put me into your cart. Did
you see my husband? I must find him,” she continued.
“We found you near the road on which we travel back to
our village, Stow.”
“Do you work at the village?” she asked.
“Everyone works in our village.” He appeared confused
at her question.
“Well, that is the answer. You are re-enactors. But why
speak in Old English?”
“I do not understand. What is that you call Old
English?”
She laughed, but held her arms across her chest to
buffer the aching muscles.
“And I really do admire how you keep in character, even
down to using the old language.”
“You speak about such strange things, woman. Sit back
in the cart,” the old man commanded. “We must hurry along
our journey. Our families will be worried about us if we are
too late getting home.”
Cathy inched backwards into the cart. He clicked with
his mouth, and the horse resumed its pace along the rutted
lane. She moved onto the scratchy blanket again and leaned
on the logs for support. As soon as they arrived at the
village, she’d call the police to pick her up and take her
to the hospital. She was concerned for her own safety. Who
knew what these men were up to? Al must be at the emergency
room by now.
She pulled the small phone out of her pocket and
flipped the top open. It broke into two pieces in her
hands—it didn’t light up, or sign on with the happy jingle
she’d programmed it to do. Nothing. Silence. It was dead;
she felt lost. No way to contact her husband. This is a
nightmare.
The acrid smell of wood smoke filled the air. In the
moonlight, the outlines of small buildings appeared as
silhouettes clustered on a small hill. The cart rumbled
along the path as Cathy peered over the sides. The whole
village looked different. Maybe I’m in a different part of
the village.
Smoke from the fire swirled up into the heights of the roof,
where it escaped through the thatch. Cathy’s eyes began to
water and sting from the smoke. She feared for her sensitive
sinuses. No wonder the woman had a hacking cough.
Ethel came closer to her, crouched down and stared at her
with eyes covered with pale-blue cataracts. “Where are you
from?” she asked.
“I am not sure,” Cathy said quietly, “but right now, I’m
exhausted and still bleeding from my cuts. I have to lie
down and rest.”
The woman grunted and nodded as she threw a dirty covering
over a pile of dried heather and straw on one side of the
hut and then handed her a rough blanket. Cathy lowered
herself gingerly onto the primitive bed and pulled the
blanket up to her neck. Fear crept into her being as she
realized this village wasn’t the recreated village she knew.
Thoughts swirled around inside her head.
Where am I? What happened to me? Am I dead? Is this a dream?
Am I in a parallel universe? Am I in another dimension
parallel to our universe? Cathy thought back to a lecture
she and Al had attended on the new “string theory,” where it
is thought that time and dimensions bend and even operate
simultaneously. Did the accident cause me to morph into
another parallel world, identical to our universe but
operating in a different time period? Where is Al?
She wished she hadn’t been so impatient and snappy with Al.
She was now stuck in this dream, or whatever it was. Unless
she was dead, how would she return to her husband, her one
love?
Places Depicted in The DRAGONFLY
Bury St. Edmunds -
Reproduced Anglo Saxon houses at West Stow, Suffolk, England.
Otley
Hall - the Gosnold
family home, where Gosnold planned the first journey to
Jamestown, VA.
Women's Land Army
(WLA) - World War II - Land
Army gals working the fields. Thousands of women ran the
farms in England while the farm hands were off fighting the
war.
Beautiful photo -
taken in March, 2003, of daffodils lining the carriage drive
up to a magnificent manor in my hometown, Bury St. Edmunds,
England.
Discover The First Chapter in the History of the United
States - Go to this site and discover the first
chapter in the history of the United States with this
British Commemoration of the Jamestown Adventure.
Fascinating! |